The Universal Pandemic of Violence: A Narratological Reading of Ian McEwan’s Black Dogs | ||
| The International Journal of Humanities | ||
| Article 3, Volume 11, Issue 1, 2004, Pages 23-30 PDF (4.45 M) | ||
| Author | ||
| Hoseyn Payandeh* | ||
| English Literature, Allameh Tabatabaee University | ||
| Abstract | ||
| This paper aims to offer a critical reading of the contemporary English author Ian McEwan’s fifth novel entitled Black Dogs (1992). I postulate that literary critics have frequently read his fiction for what it is not. As such, McEwan’s thought-provoking engagement with cultural questions has more often than not gone unexamined owing to a critical blueprint that, reducing his oeuvre to the topoi of violence, or to a gallery of obnoxious characters branded as psychopaths, typecasts him as a writer of disturbing, salacious fiction. Arguing that McEwan writes to dissect and criticise contemporary cul-ture, I offer a reading of his novel as a literary intervention into a cultural debate. I argue that of cru-cial importance in McEwan’s novel is the question of the narrative structure through which the differ-ent segments of Black Dogs are recounted. Drawing on the narratological concepts and terminology in-troduced in the works of Gَerard Genette and Shlomith Rimmon-Kenan, I examine the complexities of the narrative discourses of McEwan’s novel and its interlinking thematic analogies. Based on this read-ing, I conclude that McEwan’s intervention in the ongoing cultural debates of today makes of him a se-vere critic of our time. | ||
| Keywords | ||
| narratology; Extradiegetic; Intradiegetic; Homodiegetic; Multiple Internal Focalisation; Mise en Abyme | ||
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